In this episode, I talk about the power of organized people and how they are more than enough to defeat a horde of disorganized people. I also talk about how a small, organized, hardworking minority can defeat a disorganized, fractionalized and atomized majority.
00:21:22.840Four or five strangers, whatever it is you talk to about something like Bill C-8, Bill C-9, it's never going to affect them.
00:21:30.540That's why it's not part of their lives.
00:21:32.900They're not going to put themselves in a situation where they have to fear police censorship or arrest because of what they're saying on the Internet or the opinions they're vocalizing.
00:22:32.400And the obvious, you know, comparison to this that illustrates that point is how is it that, you know, the Sikh diaspora, the Hindu diaspora, the Jewish diaspora, the Muslim diaspora, how is it that all these, you know, diaspora groups, which individually are tiny fractions of the population?
00:22:52.800How is it that they have been, you know, so, so easily able to shape politics and influence politics in this country?
00:23:03.980And the answer is because they are organized.
00:23:21.560And a small, organized, hardworking minority will always be a disorganized, fractionalized, atomized, individualistic, you know, disorganized majority.
00:23:37.520You know, go look at, you know, military examples are the best of this.
00:23:41.340But why is it that Rome was able to beat, you know, tribes of 100,000 people with, you know, three legions, which is like I think that's like 9000 men or something.
00:23:51.940How is it that they were able to do that?
00:23:53.860Well, because they fought in an organized fighting force with, you know, professional tactics, a command structure, leadership.
00:24:02.320And that will always defeat or almost always defeat a horde of disorganized, you know, individuals fighting their own battle.
00:24:10.960So it's time to focus on that instead of just, you know, bitching about, you know, how people need to wake up.
00:24:23.720The funny thing about that, too, to me is that whenever I hear people say that, like, oh, we need more people to wake up, wake up and do what?
00:24:32.460What are they supposed to do after they wake up?
00:25:46.120And the only way you can do that effectively is through some kind of organization with leadership, structure, hierarchy, funding, resources, professionalism, you know, all of these things.
00:25:57.000Okay, I definitely just kind of went off on a tangent that I wasn't expecting to.
00:26:07.480I was going to mention at the beginning there, GrootForce dropped like five gift subscriptions in the chat.
00:27:18.540But we take a lot of shit for, you know, the, oh, what do you guys even do?
00:27:25.760When are you guys going to fight Antifa?
00:27:27.940When are you going to overthrow the government?
00:27:30.000When are you going to, we're not going to do any of those things because we don't have the man.
00:27:33.500Just straight up, we do not have the manpower, the resources, the political capital, any of the things that we need to even broach that kind of topic.
00:27:43.460Like, so instead of bitching about how we're not doing enough, which frankly, we're doing quite a lot.
00:27:50.000If you're, if you're paying attention to our Second Sons social media, we're quite active actually.
00:27:55.540And there's always stuff going on within the organization and it's getting more sophisticated.
00:28:00.040And the kinds of activities that we're engaging in are starting to diversify.
00:28:09.340But we can't, like, we can't do a lot of these things.
00:28:13.140We simply don't have the manpower or the resources to do it.
00:29:36.140Well, yeah, way too many people are way too friendly and they have to start.
00:29:41.500A lot of the people who know it's fucked and they want these Indians gone, like they're still doing this thing where, like, I have to maintain this facade of civility and I have to be appropriate in my conduct.
00:29:55.060And, like, you know, I should still be polite and I should, you know, treat others.
00:29:58.340But, no, you should not treat these people with respect because why are you showing, you know, why are you being a good host, being a good, you know, why are you treating these people like they're welcome?
00:30:14.200If they're not, if you genuinely don't think that they're welcome, then why are you doing this two-faced thing where you, with one breath, would sign the paper to deport every single fucking one of them and then in the next breath you're, oh, hey, buddy, what's going on, man?
00:30:46.260There's also on our travel back through, I think it was the top part of Ontario, not the top, I guess, but remember, I don't know where we were sat, but everybody had to stop using the washroom when the truck was going by, so we just gave him the finger and he started, he was so angry.
00:31:07.880Remember all kids used to do this, if I could get them to fucking honk their horn, now it's just, you'll get them to honk.
00:31:17.300Canadian David says, haha, too true, not gonna lie, that's me.
00:31:20.760Yeah, like, I'm not trying to shit on you.
00:31:22.520Look, it's, this is like a, it's not just even a Canadian thing, it's a white people thing.
00:31:28.480It's like, you, you treat individuals, even if you don't like them as a group, you have this feeling where you have to treat them with respect and, and dignity.
00:31:37.460And like, I, like, look, that actually is a good default, you know, position to have.
00:31:42.500That's a good thing to be as a person, but that's not a good attitude to have when you're in a fifth generation war with these people.
00:31:56.100And on top of that, too, it emboldens people.
00:31:59.500When you have, have no problem saying it like it is directly to one of these people's faces as an individual to another individual, other people see that and they will agree with you.
00:32:09.340It's why, whenever it does happen and somebody goes off, it goes viral and there's thousands of people saying stuff like, yeah, fuck these people.
00:32:20.320I mean, obviously, some people hate it because they're faggots and they're liberals, but it emboldens others to say what they really feel about the situation.
00:32:29.260So, did you see the guy who wrote Indian rats on a mailbox got a $5,000 fine?
00:33:21.820It's like, I have actually 10 tabs open up here because I was just going through things that were happening on Timiskameen Shores and Highway 11, Timmins, up and around this area, right?
00:34:42.260If people haven't seen it yet, I think you'll enjoy this.
00:34:46.200If you have seen it, you'll, you'll, you'll, anyways.
00:34:56.260Pictures shared online show military-like drills, even a casualty evacuation exercise, as if perhaps to say a battle is coming.
00:35:08.120The gunfire erupted around 3.45 in the morning, and I can tell you that 13 shots were fired at this home near Bathurst Street and Highway 7.
00:35:23.280Multiple people were just killed in a shooting at a Toronto office building.
00:35:30.340A 14-year-old boy has been arrested on attempted murder and gun charges.
00:35:39.520A group of masked intruders broke into a townhouse in this Richmond Hill neighborhood, and we're learning the homeowners were dragged out of bed at gunpoint.
00:35:48.400A round of gunshots in the area of 15 Martha Eden Way.
00:35:54.660Officers responded and located an 8-year-old boy suffering from a gunshot wound.
00:36:01.760Shots are fired into a house as the gunman films.
00:38:35.580Yeah, like, if somebody's bleeding out and you can't stop it from below the waist, how to stop the main femoral artery that's pressed up against the spine and put it there and hold it until, you know, until help arrives, basically.
00:38:49.720Like, there's a lot of stuff that actually I could have applied in the past in a few situations I had that probably could have made a difference.
00:38:57.240Yeah, so the point here is that, though, they see, like, the stuff that we did at nationals or they see stuff like this and they're like,
00:39:07.840what are they preparing for, some kind of race war?
00:39:37.280Like, like, so, like, let's just go, let's just go through it.
00:39:45.460I'll come back to the deport report just for a crescendo here at one point, but.
00:39:50.780Well, one off the top is this just happened on Highway 11 to Miskameen Shores, right?
00:39:57.100Balraj Singh, 31, and Kowalabar Singh, Kowalabar, are charged with 72 times weapons trafficking and Balraj was already charged with cocaine trafficking before that.
00:40:51.480So, here, before we start going through these, because there's quite a few, I'll just note that Cocaine Rim Job, gifted five subscriptions.
00:41:14.200It'd be like, imagine being like a hundred percent, like, you know, Spanish, like, white guy and, like, having the last name Hernandez or something and living in the United States.
00:41:26.120And everywhere you go, like, people just, they see your name and they just assume you're a fucking Mexican.
00:41:30.240I had a buddy that was Portuguese, but if you looked at him and his brother, they looked like they were Indian.
00:42:52.520That looks like, you know, that looks like the kind of hands that you would see on someone with a name like O'Shaughnessy or something, right?
00:47:14.100Now, it happened at Capps Cafe, a storefront that has been shot at twice before.
00:47:19.720And Amelia John joins us live from the scene now.
00:47:22.580Okay, Amelia, what more do we know about this latest incident?
00:47:25.040Well, Jess, we're here on the scene at Capps Cafe on 120th Street, corner of 84th Avenue.
00:47:34.080Police say that at around 3.45 this morning, shots were fired.
00:47:38.680When we arrived at the scene, we could see two windows were actually shattered because of those gunshots.
00:47:44.020At 3.45 this morning, several staff were actually on site because there's a bakery component to this bakery and cafe, but thankfully no one was hurt.
00:47:54.060Now, there are media reports circulating in international media that two gangsters associated with the Lawrence Bishnoy gang are claiming responsibility for this morning's shooting.
00:48:07.800Yeah, so the gang that they just described as a terrorist organization, or prescribed as a terrorist organization in Canada, the Bishnoy gang.
00:49:57.300Roosevelt Rush, caught with 55 grams of cocaine after being released from custody on bail in December 2022 before his sentencing took place for fentanyl trafficking and gun charges, has his sentence cut in half for Jamaican facing, well, he was facing deportation, and then he had his sentence cut in half so that he doesn't have to get deported.
00:50:20.320Syed Raza, arrested for assault with a weapon after pouring an unknown substance on someone at a demonstration.
00:50:30.060Syed Abdullah Darbishamre, arrested and charged with an indecent act.
00:50:37.920Nigel Lewis is wanted on Canawide Warren for breaching a statutory release.
00:50:41.660A black is wanted for an armed robbery resulting in the victim left with life-altering injuries after being shot and robbed during an online sales meetup.
00:50:52.320This is just, hey, like, I don't know if you can hear this, but do not meet fucking niggers and browns for your Facebook marketplace meetup.
00:51:06.080It's a horrible fucking, just don't fucking do that.
00:51:09.000Like, just, like, it's another example of, like, being racist could literally save your life or prevent you from, you know, suffering life-threatening injuries just because you're a little bit racist.
00:51:37.920So, yeah, the point is not to just beat this, you know, I'm not just trying to show you every non-crime that's happened in Canada in the last week.
00:51:47.940The point is to illustrate, we do stuff like this and, like, stop the bleed or we do stuff like training in the park and we get accused of terrorism.
00:52:02.580Meanwhile, all this shit is going on, which is the reason why we're doing it in the first place.
00:52:10.920Honestly, God, with the number of people with the last name Sing and all these crimes that you do, you'd think you'd be able to do some organized crime unit.
01:01:58.680I was listening to one of Ernst Zundell's old podcasts today.
01:02:04.160And he was talking about the first time that he got charged in the 80s.
01:02:09.460They had to go and use some obscure law that was written for the 1800s about fake news and going from bar to bar so you could get charged with saying misinformation at bars.
01:02:20.080The last time it was used was something like 1908 or something.
01:02:27.780So, yeah, I got to go back and listen to that podcast, but.
01:03:55.000Now take a bunch of extremely politically radical guys, put them in a group chat, and then think about what is going to be said in those chats.
01:12:13.640Which, by the way, this is the same, you know, CBSA that, like, if you order a mean book from America and it gets stopped at the border, they'll hold it for, like, 30 days to ensure that it's not, you know, you trying to traffic hate material or some bullshit.
01:12:32.500I know multiple people who have had books and, like, other paraphernalia seized at the border because it's hateful or something.
01:12:39.840Not firearms, not explosives, not drugs, not fucking, you know, human remains or, like, some crazy shit.
01:13:09.700I'm talking, like, if you order a copy of whatever, Mein Kampf or something from Antelope Hill or Dissident Mines or something like that from a U.S. company and that gets flagged at the border, they'll hold it.
01:13:20.660If you order stuff from GTV or, you know, the GTV shop, it might get held at the border so they can, you know, make sure that it's not hate material.
01:13:31.140So, they love to do this fucking nonsense.
01:14:31.100And meanwhile, with all of this going on, we need to pass new laws to make sure that, you know, hate speech and hate crimes and things like that are dealt with.
01:14:40.940When you're gone, I don't know if you can hear when you're off doing things, doing fairy things in the background.
01:14:47.600But Ernst Sundell, I was listening to his podcast.
01:14:49.780Yeah, an old, old law they had to use to charge him.
01:14:57.000Well, we were talking, I was talking about that with Joel a little bit on our stream the other day, which is, so, in the case of Australia, one of the laws that they keep going back to, to, you know, fuck with the NSN guys is something called offensive behavior.
01:15:12.420And the roots of that law are in the early 1960s or something.
01:15:17.720And it was for things like swearing in public or, like, being, like, belligerent in public.
01:15:24.340So, like, if you were, you know, being aggressive and, you know, irritable and stuff like that in front of women and children, you know, you could catch the charge for offensive behavior.
01:15:35.400So, basically, just, like, a decency law kind of thing of, like, don't, you know, walk into a park and start spouting off profanity in front of women and children, like that type of thing.
01:15:45.160Ernst Sundell, the law they used to charge him was written by King George for singing in bars and telling fids in bars.
01:16:29.720Like, you can do that in public and you won't get charged with offensive behavior, which is exactly what that law was written for.
01:16:35.840But if you throw a Roman or boo a welcome to country, you know, the land acknowledgement, that's what they call it in Australia, welcome to country.
01:16:44.900You know, that's, you'll get arrested for that.
01:16:46.820But the reason why this is interesting is because if you understand the way that the British legal system works, it's different than, like, the American legal system.
01:16:57.160So, the American Constitution is very verbatim, right?
01:17:01.120Like, they look at the words and they go, like, what did this law say in the words?
01:17:06.800Like, they don't do the spirit of the law, though, like, look at, you know, it says this and it means this.
01:17:13.180Whereas in the British tradition, the spirit of the law is what was important.
01:17:18.240So, they actually look at, like, what was the context that this law was made under?
01:17:23.360And then that is the true spirit of the law.
01:17:25.860So, just because you can, you know, twist the language and misconstrue the way it was written into meaning something else does not mean that that's what it's for.
01:17:36.000So, there's this, like, tradition of, like, you know, understand the spirit of the law is what's important, not the actual words used to define the law.
01:17:44.040And so, in this case, it's the exact opposite.
01:17:48.760And this is, like, the two-tier justice system coming into place.
01:17:52.140They will completely, you know, avoid what the spirit of the law was in this case, which is, like, you know, you could have Antifa running around, you know, saying incredibly offensive things in front of women and children.
01:18:07.660And then, like, exactly what the law was written for.
01:18:10.400And then you could have somebody like the NSN do something that's not really that offensive and not really that, you know, egregious or something.
01:18:52.840We have a much more, it's much more, like, fluid and kind of, like, well, you know, there's also this element of British, you know, especially Westminster parliamentary style, you know, law and legislation where we just ignore something.
01:19:11.020Like, so, if something was a law and it's no longer relevant, but it's still on the books, we're like, nah, like, we don't, nah, we'll just write a new law over top of it.
01:19:20.740And it's like, yeah, that's the law now.
01:19:22.680So, there's an element of that as well.
01:19:24.500They have a habit of that, just tossing the law to the side.
01:19:54.500Well, this is another interesting one, too.
01:20:06.700Wiretap had this one, or, well, he posted this from CBC.
01:20:12.880Nova Scotia removes public's ability to file complaints about municipal politicians.
01:20:19.600So, the head of Nova Scotia's Municipal Federation says move is a pause.
01:20:24.500Nova Scotia residents can no longer file complaints about their municipal elected officials and move one advocate calls dangerously undemocratic.
01:20:35.200What a ridiculous, like, yeah, so, we're going to make a law saying you can't file complaints against us.
01:20:42.460Oh, we're just going to remove your ability to launch a formal complaint against your legal representative, or your political representative.
01:20:49.920I think it's in a better interest of everybody in town.
01:21:06.280Well, the Liberal Party investigates itself, or the ethics commissioner, like, they hired an independent contractor and found that they did nothing wrong.
01:21:17.080Well, the funny thing is here, so, you know, to tie this back to what we were just talking about with Jeremy, Pinesman says need to start making complaints in person.
01:21:24.760No, they'll arrest you if you find them and you make the complaint to them, they'll just arrest you.
01:23:12.340He's been the leader of that party for over three years now, and he just finally started talking about immigration and locking up fucking liberal traders.
01:23:21.460He's definitely using diagonal on talking points from years ago.
01:23:32.780I think I genuinely, genuinely, genuinely think that they are, to a certain extent.
01:23:40.520Like, isn't it odd that Pierre's rhetoric at times is, like, almost lifted, like, directly from what Jeremy in particular has been saying?
01:23:49.040It almost seems like they are paying attention.
01:23:51.340If they're not paying attention to him directly, they're certainly paying attention to the more aggressive component of the right wing at this point than they are to the moderate.
01:26:00.600So, CBC five-year plan includes race-based targets diversity quotas.
01:26:05.560I mean, this isn't anything new, necessarily.
01:26:09.360CBC's been doing this for some time, but it's always good to point out that they are, in fact, doing that.
01:26:15.040But, in a move sparking questions about its mandate and the use of taxpayer dollars, CBC has announced a new diversity quota in its five-year corporate plan, aiming for 30% of its creative and leadership roles to be filled by racialized or indigenous employees by 2026.
01:26:30.560Doesn't racialized sound like something that happened to you?
01:30:00.720So, the only thing I laughed at, this is like, if you've watched any, you know, sizable amount of Devin Stack, you know, black-pilled material, you'll understand this point.
01:30:13.420So, I don't know who the character is, but the only time I laughed in that entire one-minute trailer was when the guy said, you got people walking down the street in burkas.
01:30:24.940Next thing you know, there'll be public beheadings and people eating figs.
01:32:32.820It wasn't even like one of our guys or I don't even know who this, apparently that interviewer is a fucking Jew, but he's not even that hostile towards him.
01:32:41.080Like, it's not even like he's trying to be combative and you see how easily that Sibnet bullshit falls apart under the slightest bit of scrutiny.
01:32:49.540So, he says, I just want a Britain that puts British people first.
01:33:19.340So, basically, when you say, I just want a Britain that puts British people first and then you're asked to define what British is, basically your answer is, British is everything from everywhere.
01:33:40.400That's exactly, you're getting exactly what you're asking for.
01:33:43.360A Britain that puts British first, which is everyone, because that's your definition of British.
01:33:48.820So, like, that's the Sibnat ideology basically in 14 seconds and falls apart.
01:33:54.860Which is why somebody like Tommy Robinson will never debate someone like Steve Laws.
01:33:59.280Like, Steve Laws was trying to, or Mark Collett, or insert, you know, somebody who's actually respectable out of the UK, you know, right-wing political sphere.
01:34:08.920Even Sargon of Akkad, for fuck's sake, at this point, would rate Tommy on this topic.
01:34:14.340Because there's no consistency, there's no coherency to anything he's saying.
01:35:03.080He says, anyone asking you to define your nation is disingenuous.
01:35:06.200I agree, unless it's, I ask people to define their nation all the time, but for a very different reason than they would when they ask me.
01:35:17.260So, I think it's interesting that, to me, it's not a hard question to answer, right?
01:35:23.160At this, like, it's a very easy question to answer.
01:35:25.460But I, like, every time I hear a politician, you know, say, well, we, we are here to defend Canadians and make life affordable for Canadians and make life safe for Canadians.
01:36:16.620No, of course, and, like, this is, like, 2016 talking points, obviously, but, or even earlier, but it just falls apart under the tiniest bit of scrutiny.
01:36:28.060I keep saying this, but the quick sound, the quick, quick sound, quick sand that is the foundation of conservative Sivnat ideology is what is insert.
01:36:39.380You know, if it's, if it's an American, what is an American, their ideology falls apart.
01:36:43.820What is a Canadian, their ideology falls apart.
01:36:46.140What is a Swedish bird, their ideology falls apart.
01:40:41.100And the tow truck drivers aren't making any extra money because they've been told to drive completely off the road.
01:40:46.960Because if they block the road or if they're at the side of the road, then any tow truck company can be told, yeah, just take them and get them off the road, right?
01:41:44.780You have some comfortable pockets where you're only going to see the jeets when you might be at Walmart or you might be fucking in the next town over.
01:41:53.440Hey, there's an Indian family that lives there.
01:45:16.060Because they've contrived a situation in which all of those things are necessary.
01:45:21.060And now the only strategy they have left to stop you from doing this is to make you feel like a terrorist and a villain for trying to not be a victim.
01:45:31.020So, well, one of the most important things during the first aid course is you first assess the situation.
01:45:39.780If he's brown, leave him down and look for the most, after that, then you look for the most serious injury first and work your way out.
01:45:50.240But if you start and administer first aid, you cannot stop until somebody else takes over.
01:45:59.760So, if you start, there's a law saying you can't stop.
01:46:02.920But if you do not try and help them at all, you're okay.
01:46:07.480You're allowed to just sit there and film.
01:56:02.240I think that ultimately like personal responsibility is a huge part of this and like it shouldn't necessarily be society's job to bail you out of your own poor decisions constantly, okay?
01:56:14.700So like, you know, but I'm not a libertarian and I'm not like, well, you fucked up.
01:56:22.260And I also don't think that, look, there's this attitude of like, look, you need to give people freedom.
01:56:28.380But you know what else might be nice is if you didn't set fucking traps all over the place and just, you know, well, don't step in the trap or it's your own fault.
01:56:39.920It's like people who blame, like one of the most disgusting ones I've seen is whenever a teenager or like a young, you know, somebody in their early 20s does something stupid.
01:56:50.380They go to a party and they snort, you know, they're given something and they snort whatever, Coke or something, right?
01:56:57.460And there's, it's laced with fentanyl and it fucking kills them.
01:57:01.660And I've seen some disgusting shit where it's like bad parenting, you know?
01:58:16.180He, I forget what, I don't know if it was a hernia or a slip disc or something with his back.
01:58:20.000And they prescribed him opioids and he, he fought with that for years and he ended up, you know, for him, this is where I appreciate, you know, legalized weed, which is that actually is a viable solution for a lot of people who are suffering from chronic pain like that.
01:58:49.740Like you have a bunch of people that are poorly educated, bad at math, you legalize prostitution, drugs, and cocaine.
01:58:57.080You don't think this is going to go off the rails?
01:58:59.360Well, this is, it's been a while since I've railed against libertarianism.
01:59:04.600Maybe it's, I think I do it about once every three months.
01:59:07.400I'll go in on libertarianism for a bit, you know, as a former, you know, as a recovering libertarian, libtard or Lulbert.
01:59:14.780You know, I have some insight on this, I think.
01:59:18.180And this is the problem with libertarian ideology is that it invites predatory behavior and then blames the people who get preyed on for being prey.
01:59:29.800So like, it's like, it's just like I said, I'm, you're free to do whatever you want, but I'm just going to set a mousetrap here and a mousetrap there and one over there.
01:59:41.920I'm just going to set these little traps everywhere.
01:59:43.740Now, don't go step in any of those traps or it's your own fault, you know?
01:59:49.360And so it's like, okay, prostitution, gambling, drugs, alcohol, you know, predatory loans, like all of this stuff.
01:59:58.020And it's like, no, like you're free to do any of these things if you want to, but don't you get caught in them or it's your fault.
02:00:03.320And it's, you're, you're setting people up for disaster and then blaming them whenever it doesn't go well.
02:00:10.820It's like, it's just not a good system.
02:00:17.180It may be, it would be a good system if everybody had 140 IQ, but even then I don't think it would be because all it takes is, you know, a few mistakes.
02:00:25.160And even the smartest people can get sucked into terrible lifestyles.
02:00:30.720How do you feel about, um, controlled environment, um, experimentation with hallucinogens?
02:00:41.600Like if you're in a medical environment where they knew they could check your vitals, they checked you over the, you know, like mushrooms that had no side effects.
02:00:50.040They, I don't know, I think there's a good way to do it that could be advantageous to people instead of just saying, I got these mushrooms from fucking somebody up from somebody and I got to try them and maybe a year to trip, maybe it's going to be bad.
02:01:01.920There should be a more controlled environment for that, that I think.
02:01:14.720Like really, if anybody, and I have, like, this is something that I focused a lot on.
02:01:19.660Like I was pro weed legal, legal, uh, you know, legalizing weed, you know, for most of my youth, I never understood why it should be illegal.
02:01:29.240And it still doesn't make sense to me that it should be illegal.
02:01:32.380But at one point I was like, legalize everything, like trying to legislate what people can and can't ingest, you know, in terms of drugs makes no sense.
02:01:58.140And now we're seeing it in smaller towns too, where it's just, it's proliferated so much to the point where, you know, it's becoming a disaster on everybody who's not partaking in the drugs and, you know, a burden on them.
02:02:09.360And so like, that's not a good strategy, but there's only really two approaches.
02:02:15.220There's the libertarian approach, which is, and this, this is how you have to do the, it can't be, there can't be a middle ground here.
02:02:23.220Go to the libertarian route, fucking legalize everything.
02:02:54.680I think that's a fucking disaster waiting to happen.
02:02:57.960The other route is the authoritarian approach was, which is something more like Singapore, Saudi Arabia, like Thailand's pretty strict on that shit.
02:03:07.860Um, you know, Dubai, whatever, like you can point to some of these countries.
02:03:11.740Who just did it in North America recently?
02:03:18.000The reason why that approach works is because you've basically said these things are not legal and the punishments for engaging in these kinds of behavior are going to be so extreme that it's just not worth it.
02:03:30.720It's not worth that fun night with cocaine because if you get caught with it, your life is over.
02:03:39.860If it's really that much of a deterrent, people will not do it.
02:03:45.120Um, and if they do, well, they're fucking crazy and they're like, sorry, you're, you're the one who's going to serve as the lesson for everybody else, you know, for, for engaging that.
02:03:54.600So it's one of those things, everything in between those two approaches is bullshit.
02:04:00.100It's just a, it's, it's a nothing response to the problem.
02:04:04.660It's like, we're going to kind of police things and we're going to kind of punish people for it.
02:04:09.320Or we're going to, you know, let them have like mostly freedom and also protect their immigration status.
02:04:15.480It's like, yeah, like it's, it just doesn't help.
02:04:18.380So pick one, like seriously, just pick one and then go with that.
02:04:21.900Now, obviously I lean towards the authoritarian approach now.
02:04:24.940And if you were going to go that route, so to tie this back to Derek's question of like, what amount of it you should tolerate?
02:04:32.260You have to pick what is going to be allowed and what isn't going to be now, you know, Europeans typically edge air on the side of freedom more so than authoritarianism.
02:04:41.980So, you know, alcohol, marijuana, maybe if they're by themselves, they can handle these lax laws and they can learn from their mistakes when, you know, when they make them.
02:04:56.360That's what these laws were designed for.
02:04:58.280Now we have nones that don't really give a fuck about these laws and just like the idea of getting three hots and a cot.
02:05:16.160If you want it, like, I don't want to get into a whole diatribe about the motivations of crime, but when you understand why that is with murder, you know, it makes more sense.
02:05:24.860So the motivation to commit murder basically boils down to two reasons.
02:05:50.900No, this is just, this is actually like the kind of the psychological approach to understanding why people commit crimes like murder or violent crimes.
02:06:01.160So the, for the first motivation for murder is a crime of passion.
02:06:06.120It's not, people aren't thinking when they do it, they're doing it because here's an example.
02:06:11.400You walk in, your wife is sleeping with someone else and you, you know, grab a, whatever, a lamp and you smash them over the head.
02:06:47.600Now, the motivation behind a first degree murder either boils down to, again, a crime of passion,
02:06:55.140but there is a cold logic to it where they think I am not going to get caught for this or I don't care if I get caught for this and end up in jail because I want this person dead and I don't care about my own safety.
02:07:07.980So the motivation behind it is not similar to drugs.
02:07:13.000So, like, literally, I'm going to kill, like, hit man.
02:07:15.760I'm going to kill this person and get paid to do it.
02:07:18.420And again, there's an inherent belief that they aren't going to get caught for the crime, which is why they're willing to commit the crime in the first place.
02:07:26.020The reason this is important to understand when you make the point of the obvious point of murder is illegal and people still do it, and then we refer back to, say, drug crime, is that the primary motivation behind drug crime is what?
02:07:47.180And so if the punishment for the financial gain is so absurdly, you know, punitive that it outweighs the potential benefit of the profit, people will not engage in it.
02:08:03.260And this is shown in countries like I just described, like Saudi Arabia or Dubai or Singapore, where people do not engage in drug crime because it's not fucking worth it.
02:08:17.840There are still crimes of passion there.
02:08:20.180But drug crime is virtually non-existent.
02:08:22.740And the funny thing about it is drug crime that does occur in those countries happens almost entirely by foreign nationals.
02:08:30.300So people bringing it into the country and then giving it to other foreigners that are in those countries for tourism, partying, et cetera.
02:08:38.400It's not the local population because the local population is terrified of the consequences of engaging in those crimes because they know they'll fucking kill you if you engage in those crimes.
02:08:50.640That's why I hope that sorts it out for you.
02:08:55.540Now, when it comes to drug use, yeah, I don't think people should be locked away for life or executed because they did a bump of coke or, you know, they shot up some heroin.
02:09:56.300Having very stiff penalties towards drugs does have an impact, especially, like I said, when you're enforcing them.
02:10:04.040So the key element to this is that if you're going to try to, from an authoritarian approach, crack down on crime, you have to actually follow through with it, which means I actually agree that Mark Carney should be hiring more officers and stuff.
02:10:22.040But they should be militant, but they should be militant and it should be like task force of we are going to go to fucking war with, in particular, fentanyl dealers.
02:10:30.520And I'm not like you should have JTF to, you know, flash banging these drug labs and then executing the people working there on the spot.
02:10:42.420You should treat them like terrorists.
02:10:44.920See how many of these people want to keep engaging in that whenever there's the fucking boogeyman of JTF2 and C-Store running around executing drug dealers or drug manufacturers in the plants that they're working in.
02:12:58.720Um, someone who's sick is not necessarily weak and somebody who's addicted to drugs is, uh, more akin to someone who is sick than someone who is weak.
02:13:11.300Um, this is a, a, a poor attitude to have as a nationalist, I think.
02:13:17.700Um, we all know there's a lot of sick and dying people that don't have to be the way they are.
02:13:27.980I got a feeling if there was less cheats in this country, there'd be less drugs.
02:13:33.100I, I know too many, you know, very intelligent, um, you know, capable people who have fallen victim to drugs, um, to just be like, oh, they're weak.
02:15:02.900Like we had actual limbs of bodies to work on where you had to stuff the wound and like stop the bleed and he had fake blood and like, it was very comprehensive.
02:15:13.600That was the word I was fucking trying to find the other night that I couldn't, couldn't find.
02:15:27.880So much stuff that you didn't realize.
02:15:29.500It was like, he also had a fake, um, hand block that looked, it was like flesh and you know, like that's the same fucking consistency of a sex doll would, but it has three veins going in, three veins going out with valves on each end.
02:15:48.340So you can practice giving a IV into the vein and putting the catheter in, pulling the needle out and you have to look for the flashback of the blood.
02:16:01.280So you have to have the pressure in there and it's to get you used to it.
02:18:40.340Le, uh, Leonardo posted this, but, uh, Manalap in New Jersey, high school students plan to dress up as Hitler and Holocaust babies for Halloween.
02:18:52.360Comments from their group chat include, quote, kill every last one, please.
02:18:56.780And quote, I fill my vape with the gas from the Holocaust.
02:19:18.440Like they're, it's like, they're physically incapable of understanding that the reason people are like this now with you is because you were so fucking irritating and just overbearing.
02:19:31.580And you just had to like nitpick at every little thing that everybody said and make everything anti-Semitism to the point that nobody gives a fuck anymore.
02:19:41.440And now they're going the opposite route where they're like, fuck you, make me.
02:24:26.900And I fucking guarantee you that if you teach enough people those skills at some point, it's going to, your family's going to be affected by this shit at some time or number.
02:24:36.440Like your neighbors are going to be, people on the road.
02:24:39.980You could be in an accident with one of these 18 wheelers yourself.
02:24:42.680So, this is all fucking important shit.
02:26:31.120We may do that on a different, different weekend.
02:26:33.840That was just a taste what we could do.
02:26:35.300Like I said, we could do another one in the springtime if there's enough interest.
02:26:38.460And, you know, there's guys now that already know the skills that if they would want to come back as well, they could also be helping show the other people.
02:26:46.680So, we're learning more, because there's some stuff that we learned on the second day that was actually pretty cool to learn as well.
02:28:34.560There's five different, honestly, we should have a rumble, too, but there's currently five different sites that are posting our video content, at least.
02:28:43.020And then, obviously, Telegram, Twitter, and Facebook for, like, you know, more verbal or written posts.
02:28:53.420So, yeah, like, all of those, if you're looking to stay in touch with what we have going on.
02:29:01.680So, yeah, you can find our stuff there.
02:29:08.460And, crazy enough, Facebook is the biggest account we have right now, which I find interesting.